US | denial of service attack Cyberattack in Gay Marriage Battle California campaigners call FBI after alleged cyberinvasion crashes site By Rob Quinn Posted Oct 31, 2008 6:23 AM CDT Copied Richie Beanan from Los Angeles, puts a sign on a bus that will tour California in support of Proposition 8. after a rally in Sacramento, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 20, 2008. (AP Photo/Steve Yeater) Campaigners seeking to keep gay marriage legal in California say a sophisticated cyberattack crashed their website, the Wall Street Journal reports. The group has complained to the FBI that the No to Proposition 8 website was brought down for several hours Wednesday night by a coordinated "denial of service" attack. Supporters of a ban on gay marriage say they had nothing to do with the crash. "This is clearly an orchestrated attempt to tear down what has become one of the largest grass-roots movements in California electoral history," the group's director said. Tensions are rising ahead of the vote, with vandalism, sign theft, and assaults reported from both sides. Churches and civil rights groups have been pouring money and volunteers into the state. Read These Next CBS News boss pulls 60 Minutes segment critical of Trump policy. Slate examines the 'spiritual rot' of today's Vegas. Terrifying flight over Sahara is on a pilot's mind 25 years later. Jimmy Kimmel is taking on a quirky British Christmas tradition. Report an error